Ohio Chapter
NEWS RELEASE
| For Immediate Release: |
Contacts: |
| September 6, 2001 |
Marilyn Wall, (513) 761-4003
|
Sierra Club and NRDC File an Intervention on Behalf of Local Citizens Directly Affected by Serious Water, Air and Waste Pollution
(September 6, 2001- Cincinnati) - Two leading environmental groups today
sought to become plaintiffs in the Federal EPA and State of Ohio's lawsuit
against AK Steel for numerous violations of the Clear Air Act, Clean Water Act,
and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, a statute that governs waste
removal. The Sierra Club and Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) filed a
motion to intervene with Judge Herman J. Weber in the U.S. District Court,
Southern District of Ohio, Western Division, so as to join one of the most
important environmental battles in Ohio's history.
This action follows AK Steel's refusal this past spring to meet with the
Sierra Club and local citizens to discuss the effects of the pollution on people
living and working in the immediate and surrounding area of the Middletown, Ohio
plant.
Since May, the Sierra Club - which has 17,500 members in Ohio - and Ohio
Citizen Action and ECO have gone door to door in Middletown to hear the
citizens' views on the pollution from AK Steel's operations. Complaints included
houses, pools, and outdoor furniture covered daily by black dust, noxious fumes,
and the loss of Dicks Creek, a local tributary of the Ohio River, as a
recreational spot. Many reported increased allergies, respiratory problems, and
headaches.
"We want to join this case to make sure that the people breathing this
air and drinking this water are heard. The complaints filed by the EPA and State
of Ohio tell the facts of the case, but there's nothing like hearing from the
residents what it's really like to live with this pollution day after day,"
said Marilyn Wall, Conservation Chair of the Ohio Chapter of the Sierra Club.
"We heard story after story of people waking up to find their cars covered
in soot, and houses needing to be sprayed down frequently to get rid of the
black dust."
"Clearly, AK Steel is not interested in hearing about how their plant
has harmed the health and quality of life of the local community," said
Steve Crandall, lead attorney for the environmental groups with Milberg Weiss
Berhad Hynes and Lerach, LLP, a class action firm specializing in environmental
and labor issues. "But their egregious violations drew great concern from
the Sierra Club and the NRDC, who want to not only support and bolster the
government's efforts to bring justice to Middletown, but to provide a direct
voice for local citizens who experience the effects of the pollution on a daily
basis."
The U.S. Justice Department, on behalf of the Environmental Protection
Agency, filed its complaint against AK Steel on June 29, 2000. Charges include
204 specific violations of air, water, and hazardous waste laws. The State of
Ohio became an intervening plaintiff, the status the Sierra Club and NRDC are
now seeking, on July 9, 2001.
Specific allegations include:
- The illegal discharge of PCBs into Dicks Creek
- Numerous chemical spills, at least two of which caused fish kills
- Failing to control emissions of particulate matter
- The illegal release of hazardous waste into the environment, including
cyanide, waster water, zinc, lead, benzene, waste acid, among other toxic
materials
"We want to do everything we can to make sure that AK Steel is held
accountable in what is one of the most serious cases of pollution and
environmental damage in Ohio's history, and that a just and fair settlement can
reached," said Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., staff attorney at NRDC, a national
environmental group with 12,000 members in Ohio.
Next Monday, September 10, Judge Herman Weber will preside over
a hearing on AK Steel's motion to dismiss portions of the cases brought against
them by the federal and state governments.
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